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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ask The Massage Therapist Is Moving To www.massage-stlouis!

Dear Readers,

This blog was my first venture into online communication. It was a fun and easy way to venture onto the internet. Thanks to everyone who has given encouragement and support and to the readers who have submitted questions.

Since I began this blog, I started a FaceBook page. I'll be posting there whenever I write a new blog article. I hope you'll become a FaceBook fan of Massage St. Louis.

In April of this year I was finally dragged into the 21st century and got a website. My web master, Jean Probert, did an excellent job and I'm very excited about the new web site. Please check out www.massage-stlouis.com.

Ask The Massage Therapist will be moving to the new website. All the old material from this blog is available at the new location and new material will be posted there from now on. You can still Ask The Massage Therapist your questions about massage therapy.

We look forward to hearing from you. Tell your friends to stop by and visit. And remember, if you have any questions about massage therapy, please feel free to Ask The Massage Therapist. We'll try to answer as best we can.

A Reader Asks About Swelling After A Massage

A reader asks:

I received a great massage about a week ago but the next day my lower back was swollen. Why would this happen? The massage was perfect pressure and she never hurt me at all. Can you please help me understand this?

Without having been there or being able to ask follow-up questions, I can't give a definitive answer to your question. However, I'll take an educated guess.

It may have seemed that the pressure was perfect but it's possible that your body did not think the pressure was perfect. It may have been too much pressure. That's one possibility.

Another is that your back may have been overtreated. Massage therapists sometimes spend a long period of time in one area, thinking that every single tight fiber and sore spot must be relieved before they move on. It can even feel good to do it at the time but it may not be a good thing to do.

Massage sets a process in motion that continues after the session is over. Too much massage in one area can cause congestion, inflammation, and tightening of the muscles. A therapist should not work more than about ten minutes on one specific area. It is better to work a little, give the area a rest for two days, and then come back to it. It is always better to do too little than too much. Too little will do no harm but too much can cause irritation.

Did she put heat on the area after working on it? Massage will draw blood to the area. Adding heat will draw even more fluid to the area and cause congestion. Heat to warm the area before working on it can be good, but heat after an area has been thoroughly massaged can be too much.

Finally, it's quite possible that the swelling had nothing to do with the massage and was a coincidence. Perhaps something else occurred that you may not have been aware of. These things happen.

I've never had the experience of a client getting swelling after massage, but I did have an experience of too much massage creating congestion. I was in Latvia with my Russian Massage teacher Zhenya Kurashova Wine. We were at a clinic learning how massage was used in a clinic setting and we ourselves received treatment. Since we were foreigners and there for a limited time, we were getting more treatment than would have been normal. My arms were bothering me from overuse so I welcomed the opportunity to have them treated.

By the fourth day they began to feel congested. The therapist did not use a lot of pressure but the massage brought a lot of blood to the muscles. Zhenya always told us that muscles should be massaged like this only every other day, not every day, because it was too much. You bring the blood to the area and then leave it alone for a day to give the body a chance to do its work. When I told Zhenya my arms were feeling a little congested, she instructed me to skip treatment for a day. My arms began to feel better. I learned myself that more is not always better.

Yours is an uncommon response and so I don't know exactly why you had that experience. However, these may be some possible reasons why you had some swelling after your massage. Should this happen again, you might try putting ice on the affected area and ask your therapist to work more gently for less time on the area.

Thanks for your question